[…] when sounds (or sound-features) 'x' and 'y' occur in identical environments they are assigned to different phonemes (e.g. (l) and (r) in the environment /—ayf/ : 'life', 'rife'). - Harris (1951), a pag.7, n.4 Any sound feature whose occurrence is limited in terms of a morphological segment (e.g. one morpheme) can be indicated by a juncture phoneme or an automatically placeable boundary mark which will indicate both the feature in question and the morphological boundary. - Harris (1951), a pag.175
|